Phone screen – Supported devices

We are excited to provide an early preview into the newest feature for the Your Phone app –
phone screen. You can now mirror your Android phone’s screen directly on your PC without having to dig for your phone. This article describes the PCs and phones that support this new feature.

Supported PCs

You can use the Your Phone app on any Windows 10 PC running Windows builds 1803 or newer and any
Android phone running Android version 7.0 or newer.
The new phone screen feature requires you to be
running the latest Insider builds (1903) and is initially only compatible with a limited set of devices.

Your PC also needs to support Bluetooth with Low Energy Peripheral mode, see below for details on how to check whether it does.

Surface Go will be the first device in the Surface lineup to preview this feature. We will continue to expand the list of devices over time for both the PC and phone.

Supported phones

Currently the feature is only available on the following select Android phones running Android 7.0 or greater:

Samsung Galaxy S8

Samsung Galaxy S8+

Samsung Galaxy S9

Samsung Galaxy S9+

Samsung Galaxy S10

Samsung Galaxy S10+

Samsung Galaxy S10e

Samsung Galaxy Note 8

Samsung Galaxy Note 9

OnePlus 6

OnePlus 6T

We will continue to expand the list of devices over time for both the PC and phone.

How to check if your PC supports Bluetooth Low Energy Peripheral Role

Make sure Bluetooth is turned on

Open Device Manager by right-clicking on the
Start menu.

Select and expand the Bluetooth option.

Select the Radio Driver or Adapter for Bluetooth.

Double click to open Properties.

Navigate to the Details tab.

Find the “Bluetooth radio supports Low Energy Peripheral Role” property on the dropdown and select it.

See if the value is true or false.

If it’s “true” then your PC will be able to display your phone screen and interact with it.

Can someone provide a list of Bluetooth USB dongles that are known to support Bluetooth radio supports Low Energy Peripheral Role?

Side note I think you can also use the Bluetooth LE Explorer from the Windows Store and the Virtual Peripheral option to see if the necessary Bluetooth mode is supported. Its results match what I saw in the Device Manager in that Peripheral mode is not supported
on my desktop computer with the current Bluetooth dongle I have. Below is the link if anyone wants to try it out.